Substantive Consolidation
Substantive consolidation is a judge-made doctrine that permits a bankruptcy court to disregard the corporate separateness of two otherwise distinct corporate entities. When a bankruptcy court substantively consolidates two or more entities, the assets of and claims against the consolidated entities are pooled and creditors of the different entities must look to a single consolidated pool of assets to satisfy their claims. Additionally, when two or more entities are substantively consolidated, inter-company claims between consolidated entities are eliminated and guarantees issued by one entity of another entity’s debts are also eliminated. However, substantiveconsolidation does not strip a creditor of its liens or other security instruments. A creditor’s lien will survive substantive consolidation and the creditor may assert that lien against the same collateral it could have but for the substantive consolidation.
Substantive consolidation can have dramatic consequences for unsecured creditors and is an extraordinary remedy only granted by courts in very limited circumstances. When a court orders substantive consolidation, creditors of the less insolvent debtor in effect subsidize the recoveries of creditors of the more insolvent debtor. Consider the following example. Assume debtor A has unencumbered assets of $80 and unsecured claims against it of $100. Assume debtor B has unencumbered assets of $30 and unsecured claims against it of $100. Without substantive consolidation, unsecured creditors of debtor A would recover 80% on their claims and unsecured creditors of debtor B would recover 30%. But if a bankruptcy court orders substantive consolidation, the assets of and claims against debtors A and B will be combined. The combined pool of unencumbered assets will be $110 ($80 from debtor A and $30 from debtor B) and the combined pool of unsecured claims will be $200 ($100 from both debtors A and B). This results in unsecured creditors of debtors A and B each recovering 55% on their claims.
There is no explicit authority in the Bankruptcy Code for a court to disregard corporate separateness and substantively consolidate multiple entities. Rather, the authority is entirely judge-made and focuses the equities of the particular case before the court. Because substantive consolidation is judge-made law, there are no uniform guidelines for its application. One commentator has stated that “it is virtually impossible to predict when related entities will be [substantively] consolidated.”[1]
While it is difficult to predict whether a court will substantively consolidate multiple legal entities in a particular case, the party seeking to consolidate faces formidable burdens. One court has stated that it will only permit consolidation in two circumstances. First, substantive consolidation may be appropriate if creditors dealt with the entities as a single economic unit and did not rely on their separate identity in extending credit. Second, consolidation may also be appropriate when the affairs of the entities to be consolidated are so entangled that consolidation will benefit all creditors—that is, the costs of disentangling the entities are so great that creditors of both entities would be better off if the costs were not undertaken.
These two limited circumstances under which substantive consolidation may be appropriate serve important goals. They protectcreditor expectations that, when extending credit, the borrower’s assets will not be depleted to satisfy the debts of another company. Because this expectation is involved in calculating interest rates and other terms, protecting this expectation is essential to promoting efficient credit markets. Second, this test ensures that substantive consolidation will only occur when the harm it causes is offset by the even greater harm related to the cost of untangling a debtor’s commingled assets.
Some courts have set out five “themes” that should govern every substantive consolidation dispute:
- Courts should avoid the cross-creep of liability by respecting entity separateness.
- Substantive consolidation is a creditor’s remedy against harm caused by debtors.
- Administrative convenience (of the bankruptcy case) is insufficient to justify substantive consolidation.
- Substantive consolidation should be used rarely because it is extreme and imprecise.
- Substantive consolidation may not be used offensively to tactically disadvantage creditors.
Other courts apply various “factors” to determine whether substantive consolidation is appropriate. These factors include the following:
- Whether affiliates operate as independent entities or whether one is dominated by and operated for the benefit of another;
- Whether corporate formalities are observed or ignored in operations;
- Whether the assets of affiliated entities are kept separate or commingled and whether records are kept which permit the segregation of the assets and liabilities of such affiliates;
- Whether affiliates hold themselves out to the public as separate entities;
- Whether affiliates have common directors or officers;
- Whether the parent finances the subsidiary or guarantees loans made to the subsidiary;
- Whether the affiliates have grossly inadequate capital; and
- Whether one affiliate has substantially no business other than with the other affiliate and no assets except those conveyed by the affiliate.
The existence of one or more of the factors listed above will not necessarily require substantive consolidation. If a creditor relies upon the separate identity of an entity in approving a transaction, the creditor’s reliance upon the separateness of the entity from its affiliates militates strongly against substantive consolidation. If a debtor maintains separate books and records, avoids commingling assets, and otherwise maintains corporate policies designed to preserve separateness, substantive consolidation is unlikely to be applied, absent consent of all creditors.
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[1]M. Kors, Altered Egos: Deciphering Substantive Consolidation, 59 U. Pitt. L. Rev. 381, 384 (Winter 1998).